hecpilot
Well-known member
Welcome to my first ride report, and my first cross country motorcycle trip. Prior to this, the longest I had ridden was 250-ish miles in one day, Houston to San Antonio and then some.
I had always dreamt of crossing the country by motorcycle. My first bike was a Suzuki GS-450 that I bought at the age of 16. I remember exploring the nearby towns and country roads and imagining what it would be like to really go a long distance.
Fast forward--27 years, a 2007 FJR1300-AE, a few weeks vacation, a super-supportive significant other, and it was time to make the dream come true. The original goal was to ride from Houston to the Pacific Ocean and back, but early on I decided that this trip would be about the journey, and not the goal. Plans would be flexible, the destination flexible, I would have a plan A, B, C and a plan "whatever". The only hard constraints would be to meet up with friends in Albuquerque and near Salt Lake City on certain days in order to work out our various work and days-off schedule. I would ride 250 to a max of 400 miles per day, stop when tired, sleep when I felt like it, take lots of pictures, have fun along the way. And while there wasn't a set budget, it was by no means unlimited. I would try to economize to make the trip last longer.
The original outline would be Houston to San Francisco via San Antonio, Midland, Tx, Albuqurque, Durango, CO, Salt Lake City, TBD somewhere on the way to San Fran, San Fran, then returning via a similar route. I wanted to see my family, ride with my friends, see the Grand Canyon, Bryce and Zion national parks, and whatever else seemed good along the way. If I got tired or sick or sick of riding, I would stop in Albuquerque or Salt Lake City and either head for home or leave the bike with friends and fly home. And Salt Lake City would be a perfect alternate destination in case time or money constraints prevented making it to San Fran. Of special concern was my tail bone, broken 15 years ago and still giving me fits to this day.
As this was my first long distance trip, I tried to put some thought into my equipment and gear. With a lot of research from other ride reports, consideration of the time of year and climate, this is what I decided on:
2007 FJR 1300 AE
V-Stream Windshield
Seat Mod by Spencer https://greatdaytoride.com/Home_Page.php
Cortech 18liter Tank Bag, magnetic
Premier Cycle Accessories FJR1300 Tail Rack https://www.premiercycleaccessories.com/Sma...ack_p/11999.htm
JC Whitney Tail Trunk, large, with my own LED mods
Wal-Mart Sport Duffle bag, qty 2, 12.00/ea. One for the tail trunk, other for the winter gear and would ride on the back seat. (Note, the bag fits *perfectly* in the JC Whitney tail trunk.
Garmin Zumo GPS
Cardo Scala Bluetooth headset
Clothes/Gear
Helmet - HJC Symax modular
Balaclava
Tourmaster Transition Series 2 jacket with liner
Tourmaster Flex pants with both liners
Tourmaster Synergy heated jacket liner
Alpinestars SMX 2 AC summer gloves
Olympia - Cold Throttle winter gloves
Alpinestars Web Gore-Tex Boots
Froggs Toggs Rain Gear
underclothes for 10 days, shirts/jeans/shorts for 5
sandals
Camera
Canon Powershot S5-IS
Raynox 0.66x Wide Angle Conversion Lens
Lensmate 52mm lens adapter
Joby Gorillapod Tripod https://www.joby.com/products/gorillapod/original/
Tools/Misc
2 liter hydration bottle for the Cortech Tank Bag (Wal-Mart)
Slime Air Pump and tire plug kit
Socket set, allen wrench set, zip ties, duct tape, electrical tape, Rescue brand tape, ignition switch override kit (home made), Lock-tite, vice grips, wire strippers/cutter, multi-tool, 2 led flashlights, tire pressure guage
First aid kit
Chargers for everything
Laptop
Joel's BBQ ball cap
Stuffed dog mascot, Kiki.
Rider:
Me, Henry. 43 year old father of 1. Airline pilot. Computer Geek. Riding experience: 3 years in my late teens, off and on through my 20's and 30's, and 8 months on the FJR.
I'll be posting every few days with photos and recollections of each day. I'll also be adding "Gear Reports" to let you know how all the stuff worked, or didn't work. Along the way we'll hit cities, mountains, deserts, sun, heat, cold, rain and snow. Thanks for reading and look for my first post tomorrow.
[first update: I'm back home and will be writing this post-dated. I wish I had time during the ride itself to write each day, but I was having too much fun!]
I had always dreamt of crossing the country by motorcycle. My first bike was a Suzuki GS-450 that I bought at the age of 16. I remember exploring the nearby towns and country roads and imagining what it would be like to really go a long distance.
Fast forward--27 years, a 2007 FJR1300-AE, a few weeks vacation, a super-supportive significant other, and it was time to make the dream come true. The original goal was to ride from Houston to the Pacific Ocean and back, but early on I decided that this trip would be about the journey, and not the goal. Plans would be flexible, the destination flexible, I would have a plan A, B, C and a plan "whatever". The only hard constraints would be to meet up with friends in Albuquerque and near Salt Lake City on certain days in order to work out our various work and days-off schedule. I would ride 250 to a max of 400 miles per day, stop when tired, sleep when I felt like it, take lots of pictures, have fun along the way. And while there wasn't a set budget, it was by no means unlimited. I would try to economize to make the trip last longer.
The original outline would be Houston to San Francisco via San Antonio, Midland, Tx, Albuqurque, Durango, CO, Salt Lake City, TBD somewhere on the way to San Fran, San Fran, then returning via a similar route. I wanted to see my family, ride with my friends, see the Grand Canyon, Bryce and Zion national parks, and whatever else seemed good along the way. If I got tired or sick or sick of riding, I would stop in Albuquerque or Salt Lake City and either head for home or leave the bike with friends and fly home. And Salt Lake City would be a perfect alternate destination in case time or money constraints prevented making it to San Fran. Of special concern was my tail bone, broken 15 years ago and still giving me fits to this day.
As this was my first long distance trip, I tried to put some thought into my equipment and gear. With a lot of research from other ride reports, consideration of the time of year and climate, this is what I decided on:
2007 FJR 1300 AE
V-Stream Windshield
Seat Mod by Spencer https://greatdaytoride.com/Home_Page.php
Cortech 18liter Tank Bag, magnetic
Premier Cycle Accessories FJR1300 Tail Rack https://www.premiercycleaccessories.com/Sma...ack_p/11999.htm
JC Whitney Tail Trunk, large, with my own LED mods
Wal-Mart Sport Duffle bag, qty 2, 12.00/ea. One for the tail trunk, other for the winter gear and would ride on the back seat. (Note, the bag fits *perfectly* in the JC Whitney tail trunk.
Garmin Zumo GPS
Cardo Scala Bluetooth headset
Clothes/Gear
Helmet - HJC Symax modular
Balaclava
Tourmaster Transition Series 2 jacket with liner
Tourmaster Flex pants with both liners
Tourmaster Synergy heated jacket liner
Alpinestars SMX 2 AC summer gloves
Olympia - Cold Throttle winter gloves
Alpinestars Web Gore-Tex Boots
Froggs Toggs Rain Gear
underclothes for 10 days, shirts/jeans/shorts for 5
sandals
Camera
Canon Powershot S5-IS
Raynox 0.66x Wide Angle Conversion Lens
Lensmate 52mm lens adapter
Joby Gorillapod Tripod https://www.joby.com/products/gorillapod/original/
Tools/Misc
2 liter hydration bottle for the Cortech Tank Bag (Wal-Mart)
Slime Air Pump and tire plug kit
Socket set, allen wrench set, zip ties, duct tape, electrical tape, Rescue brand tape, ignition switch override kit (home made), Lock-tite, vice grips, wire strippers/cutter, multi-tool, 2 led flashlights, tire pressure guage
First aid kit
Chargers for everything
Laptop
Joel's BBQ ball cap
Stuffed dog mascot, Kiki.
Rider:
Me, Henry. 43 year old father of 1. Airline pilot. Computer Geek. Riding experience: 3 years in my late teens, off and on through my 20's and 30's, and 8 months on the FJR.
I'll be posting every few days with photos and recollections of each day. I'll also be adding "Gear Reports" to let you know how all the stuff worked, or didn't work. Along the way we'll hit cities, mountains, deserts, sun, heat, cold, rain and snow. Thanks for reading and look for my first post tomorrow.
[first update: I'm back home and will be writing this post-dated. I wish I had time during the ride itself to write each day, but I was having too much fun!]
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